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NEW PUBLICATION.

 

ANATOLIA, or Russia Triumphant and Europe Chained. By John Thomas, M.D., Author of Elpis Israel. 1854. Price 50 cents; 8vo. Pp. 104 postage about six cents.

 

This is a work that ought to be in the hands of every one desirous of knowing to what predetermined consummation current events in the world are drifting. It is a work for the statesman, the politician, and the Christian; for the former, because by the light it irradiates upon the situation of affairs it will enable them to foresee in what results the alliances they might be disposed to contract with foreign powers might issue; and when writing and speaking upon the tendency of things, to do so as men who understand whereof they affirm. It is a work also preeminently for the Christian, inasmuch as it proves to him incontestably that his redemption is at hand.

 

The book is styled ANATOLIA from anatole, signifying Day-Spring or the East; because the great question whose solution it demonstrates pertains to the eventide dawn of "the great Day of God Almighty." "At eventide it shall be light."

 

ANATOLIA cannot fail of being deeply interesting to the Jews. They will not, of course, admit that Jesus is their long-expected Messiah; but with that exception in the premises, there is nothing in the book to which a candid Israelite can fairly take exception. It shows him the kind of Messiah Jehovah has promised them in the prophets, and especially in Daniel—a Holy and Righteous King, once a sufferer but divinely approved, and afterwards exalted to David’s throne, which he re-establishes, consequent upon their restoration, and the overthrow of the governments that now oppress them. It points them to the Eastern Question as the Sign in the Gentile Heavens that their long-expected Deliverer will soon appear.

 

Besides the demonstration of the propositions contained on its title-page, ANATOLIA is an original and systematic interpretation of the Book of Daniel. This has been a desideratum for 2400 years; for as far as the writer is aware, there is no exposition of it extant at all worthy the acceptation of those whose minds have been enlightened by the gospel of the Kingdom of which it treats; besides that the denouement it reveals was not to be discerned until the time of the end. The reader will find the times of Daniel proved as nearly as possible; and indicating the period of the Advent of the Messiah, the Resurrection of the "Many," the disastrous overthrow of the Russo-Gogian Confederacy on the Mountains of Israel, the subsequent fall of the Ten-Horn Thrones of the Gentiles, and destruction of the Papacy; the Restoration of the Twelve Tribes, and the foundation of the Age to Come. By no other interpreter have these events been punctuated; neither could they, because the times of Judah and Babylon in connection with Micah’s 40 years, and the thirty years’ hour of judgment, have never been taken into account.

 

Here, then, is a book offered to the public whose demonstrations cannot be obtained elsewhere for love nor money. The price is put down as low as possible, that no one may be without it on the score of poverty. It is published by the author at Mott Haven, Westchester Co., New York, to whom orders containing the price can be sent, pre-paid. As 50 cents cannot be sent in a letter, the best plan for a single subscriber would be to order two copies at least, and enclose as many three cent-stamps besides the dollar as will pay for the postage on them.

 

The British public will be supplied with ANATOLIA by editions published in London. The copyright has been secured there, and stereotype plates are on their way for the supply of whatever demand may arise in that country. If The Coming Struggle, or 32 pages of unproved assertion, ran through 150 editions of a thousand each, ANATOLIA cannot fail of commanding a circulation that shall overshadow it; and open a door there besides for the proclamation of the Gospel of Israel’s Kingdom, such as that nation has not known since the Romans abandoned Britain to its own defence. Anatolia asserts nothing without proof.

 

The work is now before the public. It consists of 104 pages of the size of the Herald’s. The edition is small; an early application is therefore advisable for all who would secure it.

 

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